Fr. James Alberione, Founder of the Pauline Family, was one of the most creative apostles of the
20th century. He was born in San Lorenzo di Fossano (Cuneo), Italy, on 4 April
1884 and baptized the following day. The profoundly Christian and hard-working
Alberione family, made up of Michael and Teresa Allocco and their six children,
were farmers.

Little James, the fourth child of the family, felt the call of God early in
life. When questioned by his first-grade teacher as to what he wanted to be
when he grew up, he replied, “I want to be a priest!”. His childhood years
were directed to this goal.

When the Alberione family moved to Cherasco, in the Alba diocese, the
parish priest of St. Martin's Church, Fr. Montersino, helped young James to
reflect on God's call and respond to it. At the age of 16, James entered the
seminary of Alba and immediately met Canon Francesco Chiesa, who would be his
father, guide, friend and advisor over the next 46 years.

At the end of the Holy Year of 1900, James, who had read and reflected deeply on
Pope Leo XIII's encyclical, Tametsi Futura, underwent an experience that would
give direction to the rest of his life. On the night of 31 December 1900, the
night that divided the 19th and 20th centuries, he prayed for four hours before
the Blessed Sacrament and contemplated the future in the light of God. A
“particular light” seemed to come from the Host and roused in him a sense of
obligation “to do something for the Lord and for the people of the new century”:
he felt “obliged to serve the Church” with the new instruments provided by
human ingenuity.

James continued his intensive study of philosophy and theology and on 29
June 1907 he was ordained a priest. His time as assistant pastor in Narzole
(Cuneo) was brief but decisive from the perspective of pastoral experience. In
Narzole he met little Giuseppe Giaccardo, who would be to him as Timothy was to
the Apostle Paul. It was also in Narzole that Fr. Alberione came to a clearer
understanding of what women could do in the apostolate.

Fr. Alberione served as spiritual director to both the major and minor
seminarians in the Seminary of Alba, where he also taught various subjects. He
helped out with preaching, catechesis and giving conferences in the various
parishes of the diocese. In addition to this, he devoted much time to studying
the civil-ecclesial situation and the newly-emerging needs of society.

He came to understand that the Lord was guiding him toward a new
mission:
to preach the Gospel to all peoples, in the spirit of the Apostle Paul, using
the modern instruments of communication. This is confirmed by two books he wrote:
Notes on Pastoral Theology (1912) and Woman Associated to Priestly Zeal (1911-1915).

For the sake of charism and continuity, such a mission needed to be
carried out by consecrated persons because “the works of God are performed by
men and women of God.” Thus, on 20 August 1914, while Pope Pius X lay dying in
Rome, Fr. Alberione initiated the Pauline Family in Alba by founding the Pious
Society of St. Paul. The Institute was born in utter poverty, according to the
divine pedagogy: “always begin from Bethlehem.”

The human family—to which Fr. Alberione turned for inspiration—is made
up of brothers and sisters. The first woman to follow Fr. Alberione was 21-year-old
Teresa Merlo from Castagnito (Cuneo). With her help, Fr. Alberione began a
second Congregation in 1915: the Daughters of St. Paul. Slowly the “Family”
grew, both masculine and feminine vocations increased, and the apostolate began
to take shape.

In December 1918, his first “daughters” left for Susa, where the work
they initiated forms part of the courageous story of faith and enterprise that
gave rise to what came to be called the “Pauline” lifestyle. But progress
came to an abrupt halt in 1923 when Fr. Alberione fell gravely ill and the
doctors despaired of his recovery. However the Founder was able to miraculously
resume his journey, later saying, “St. Paul healed me.” During that period,
the words Fr. Alberione had received in a dream or revelation from the Divine
Master were first inscribed on the walls of the Family's chapels: “Do not be
afraid. I am with you. From here I want to enlighten. Be sorry for sin.”

The following year, a second feminine Congregation came into being: the
Pious Disciples of the Divine Master, whose members would carry out the
Eucharistic, priestly and liturgical apostolate. To guide this Institute, Fr.
Alberione chose the young Sr. M. Scholastica Rivata, who died at the age of 90
in a state of holiness.

On the apostolic level, Fr. Alberione promoted the printing of popular
editions of the Bible and used the swiftest instrument of the time—periodicals—to
help the message of Christ reach even those furthest away. He had already begun
the magazine Vita Pastorale (The Pastoral Life) in 1912 for parish priests. In
1931 he launched Famiglia Cristiana, (Christian Home) a weekly magazine to
nourish the Christian life of families. Other periodicals followed: (Madre di
Dio) Mother of God (1933), “to reveal the beauty and greatness of Mary to
people”; Pastor Bonus (Good Shepherd) (1937), a monthly magazine in Latin;
Via, Verità e Vita (Way, Truth, Life) (1952), a monthly dedicated to the
teaching of Christian doctrine; (Vita in Cristo nella Chiesa) Life in Christ and
in the Church (1952), to help people “get to know the treasures of the Liturgy,
disseminate the things that serve it, and live it according to the mind of the
Church.” Turning his attention to young people, Fr. Alberione began the weekly
children's magazine, Il Giornalino (The Little Newspaper).

The Founder also built the magnificent Church of St. Paul in Alba,
followed by two Churches to the Divine Master (in Alba and Rome) and the
Sanctuary of the Queen of Apostles (Rome). Above all, he strove to reach beyond
local and national borders. In 1926, he established a branch house in Rome,
followed over the years by many foundations in Italy and abroad.

Meanwhile, Fr. Alberione's spiritual “edifice” was growing. He
inculcated in his followers a spirit of dedication by means of deeply apostolic
devotions: to Jesus Master and Shepherd “Way, Truth and Life,” to Mary
Mother, Teacher and Queen of Apostles, and to St. Paul the Apostle. In fact, it
was this reference to the Apostle that gave his new institutes their identity as
the “Pauline Family.” The goal that Fr. Alberione wanted his sons and
daughters to pursue above all was complete conformation to Christ: to embrace
the whole Christ Way, Truth and Life with one's entire being: mind, will, heart
and physical energies. This orientation was codified in his small book, Donec
Formetur Christus in Vobis (That Christ Be Formed in You) (1932).

In October 1938, Fr. Alberione founded a third feminine Congregation: the
Sisters of Jesus the Good Shepherd or “Pastorelle Sisters,” to assist parish
priests in their work.

During the enforced “break” of World War II (1940-1945), Fr.
Alberione did not suspend his spiritual itinerary but continued to embrace the
light of God more and more, in a climate of adoration and contemplation. Witness
to this can be found in the Founder's spiritual notebooks, in which he jotted
down his inspirations and the means he adopted to correspond to the plan of God.
This spiritual milieu nurtured the meditations he guided every morning for his
sons and daughters, as well as his directives for the apostolate and the
numerous retreats and courses of spiritual exercises he preached (the
conferences of which were collected together into various volumes). Fr.
Alberione's primary focus remained unswerving: to help everyone understand that
“the first concern of the Pauline Family should be holiness of life; the
second, holiness of doctrine.” It is in this light that he forged ahead with
his Project for an Encyclopedia on Jesus Master (1959).

In 1954, to celebrate the 40 anniversary of foundation of the Pauline
Family, Fr. Alberione for the first time allowed something about himself to be
written down (the material appears in the book Mi protendo in avanti - “I
Strain Ahead”), and he also complied with the request to jot down some
thoughts concerning the beginnings of his foundations. Thus came into being the
small book, Abundantes divitiae gratiae suae, “a charismatic history of the
Pauline Family.” This Family was completed between 1957-1960 with the
foundation of a fourth feminine Congregation, the Queen of Apostles Institute
for vocations (Apostoline Sisters), and several secular institutes for the
consecrated life: St. Gabriel the Archangel, Our Lady of the Annunciation, Jesus
Priest, and the Holy Family. Ten institutes (including the Pauline Cooperators),
united by the same ideal of holiness and apostolate: to bring Jesus Christ Way,
Truth and Life to the world through the instruments of social communication.

From 1962-1965, Fr. Alberione was a silent but attentive protagonist in
Vatican Council II, attending its sessions daily. But at the same time troubles
and sufferings were not lacking: the premature deaths of his first collaborators,
Timothy Giaccardo and Thecla Merlo; worry for the Pauline communities abroad
that were going through difficulties and, on the personal level, an
excruciatingly painful condition of scoliosis that tormented him day and night.

Fr. Alberione lived to the age of 87. Having completed the work God had
entrusted to him, he left this earth on 26 November 1971 to take his place in
the house of the Father. In his last hours, he was comforted by the visit and
blessing of Pope Paul VI, who had never hidden his admiration and veneration for
the Founder. In fact, in an audience with the Pauline Family on 28 June 1969,
the Pope spoke these moving words about Fr. Alberione, who was then 85 years
old:

“There he is: humble, silent, tireless, always vigilant, recollected in
his thoughts, which run from prayer to action; always intent on scrutinizing the
‘signs of the times,' that is, the most creative ways to reach souls. Our Fr.
Alberione has given the Church new instruments with which to express herself,
new means to give vigor and breadth to her apostolate, new capacities and a new
awareness of the validity and possibilities of his mission in the modern world
with modern means. Dear Fr. Alberione, allow the Pope to rejoice in your long,
faithful and tireless work and in the fruits it has produced for the glory of
God and the good of the Church.”

On 25 June 1996, Pope John Paul II signed the decree recognizing the
heroic virtues of the future Blessed.